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PGSF FedEx Cup Week 29 The Open Championship

NoleinATL

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Oct 29, 2006
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    Francesco Molinari is the defending Open champion. (David Cannon/Getty Images)
Golf’s oldest championship ventures outside Scotland and England for just the second time in its 160-year history, returning to Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland as Francesco Molinari defends the Claret Jug he captured in masterful fashion last year at Carnoustie.

Rory McIlroy, the 2014 champion at Hoylake and twice a winner this year (THE PLAYERS Championship, RBC Canadian Open), realizes a dream of playing on native soil along with countrymen Graeme McDowell and 2011 champion Darren Clarke. Meantime, Brooks Koepka seeks a second 2019 major to add to his victory at the PGA Championship after finishing second at the Masters and U.S. Open.

FIELD NOTES: Newly crowned U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland and Masters winner Tiger Woods also headline the field for what’s now the final major of the year under the revamped golf calendar. … FedExCup points leader Matt Kuchar heads a list featuring 47 of the top 50 in the latest points standings. … In the world rankings, only No. 34 Kevin Na (neck) is missing among the top 85. … Slots remain for the John Deere Classic’s highest top-5 finisher yet to qualify, plus the Scottish Open’s three highest top-10 finishers still without berths. … John Daly, the 1995 Open winner at St. Andrews, will sit out this year after being denied a cart for his arthritic knee. He’ll tee it up in Kentucky instead at the Barbasol Championship. … Among the 12 survivors of local qualifying is amateur Brandon Wu, who helped Stanford to the NCAA team title last month.

Field
https://www.pgatour.com/tournaments/the-open-championship/field.html

FEDEXCUP: Winner receives 600 points.

STORYLINES: The spotlight shines on Royal Portrush, a striking layout which hosted the 1951 Open but waited 68 years for another chance. Built on heaving linksland overlooking the Irish Sea, the course is widely ranked among the world’s top dozen layouts. … Koepka looks to extend his run of excellence in majors, where he hasn’t been outside the top two since last year’s Open at Carnoustie. He also has a valuable asset in caddie Ricky Elliott, who grew up a half-mile from Royal Portrush and learned the game there. … Though McIlroy has THE PLAYERS Championship and RBC Canadian Open trophies on his shelf this year, neither would compare to winning the Claret Jug in his native Northern Ireland. He already holds the course record with a 61 – posted at age 16. … It’s even more of a home game for Clarke, who grew up an hour away and is a Royal Portrush member, and Portrush native McDowell. … Woods arrives without hitting a competitive shot since the U.S. Open. It’s the second time this year he’s gone from one major to the next without a tuneup stop in between – he missed the PGA Championship cut at Bethpage Black … Molinari’s victory last year made it nine of the Open’s past 12 champions to be crowned at age 35 or older.

COURSE: Royal Portrush Golf Club (Dunluce), 7,317 yards, par 72. The only Open venue outside Scotland and England gets its second bite of the apple, albeit with a slightly altered configuration to accommodate a modern major. Two holes from the club’s adjacent Valley course have been melded into the front nine, with the original 17th and 18th holes taken out to house corporate chalets. The rest of the layout is largely untouched from Harry Colt’s brilliant 1932 design that takes full advantage of dramatic elevation changes. The famed “Calamity Corner” – an uphill par-3 measuring 230 yards – will play as No. 16 for the Open. Royal Portrush dates back to 1888, with Old Tom Morris being credited with the original layout.

72-HOLE RECORD: 264, Henrik Stenson (2016 at Royal Troon).

18-HOLE RECORD: 62, Branden Grace (3rd round, 2017 at Royal Birkdale).

LAST YEAR: Molinari rose from a crowded pack – including the revitalized Woods – to give Italy its first major champion, navigating the dastardly Carnoustie without a bogey on the final day to triumph by two. Seven players held at least a share of the lead during the final round, and six were tied for the top spot at one point on the back nine. That included Woods, who surged to the front until a double bogey at No.11. That opened the door for the chase pack – including the patient Molinari, who opened with 13 pars until a birdie at No. 14. Three more pars ensued until a bold play at No. 18, when his drive flirted with a pot bunker but set up a wedge to 5 feet for the clinching birdie and a 2-under-par 69. He was the only man in the final four groups to break par. McIlroy (70), Justin Rose (69), Xander Schauffele (74) and Kevin Kisner (74) shared second, with Schauffele’s bogey at No. 17 effectively ending the final threat. Woods (71) tied for sixth.

HOW TO FOLLOW
TELEVISION: Thursday-Friday, 1:30 a.m.-4 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday, 4:30-7 a.m. (GC); 7 a.m.-2:30 p.m. (NBC). Sunday, 4:30-7 a.m. (GC); 7 a.m.-2 p.m. (NBC).

PGA TOUR LIVE: None.

Last major of the year

RADIO: Thursday-Friday, 2 a.m.-4 p.m. ET; Saturday-Sunday, 4 a.m.-2:30 p.m. (SiriusXM).

We have arrived at the last major of the year

In the PGSF congratulations again to last weeks winner who topped the 10k mark for the year @seminoleed

@Bill From Tampa maintains his overall season lead

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Good Luck to everyone this week
 
I was already tempted to widen my net casting based on the age stats, and now looking at them has drilled the idea home:

Harrington
Scott
Stenson
Westwood
 
The dulcet, dynamic divining rod was all full of itself this morning, excited to have won with what it called "picks that were as much a guess as feeling it when I point at it." It spent the better part of the day dabbing this way and dipping that way, but uncomfortable with most of the picks, and has settled on:

Patrick Cantlay
Dustin Johnson
Brooks Koepka
Xander Schauffele
 
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The dulcet, dynamic divining rod was all full of itself this morning, excited to have won with what it called "picks that were as much a guess as feeling it when I point at it." It spent the better part of the day dabbing this way and dipping that way, but uncomfortable with most of the picks, and has settled on:

Patrick Cantlay
Dustin Johnson
Brooks Koepka
Xander Schauffele

'was all full of itself this morning...' hahahahahahaha...don't let that go to his head...;)
 
Just a heads up to everyone--if you plan on making last second picks or changes, they start teeing off around 1:30 AM our time tonight. Don't want that to screw anybody up.
My first pick, Paddy, is off at 2:30 my time. I'm planning on turning the TV on with the volume low. (My ol' lady is a deep sleeper and won't mind. :))
 
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Clarke burning up the course at -3 thru 5.

I'll go ahead and mention it now, but official website for The Open is just not good IMO. I follow a lot of the action a lot via the course map to get an idea where a player's ball may have landed. The hole by hole description was difficult to find, the pin placement map which I really like to use is terrible with the top and bottom of the chart cut off by an overlap of something else that you cannot even tell where the pin is, and gone are little items on each hole such as the descriptions on how to play the hole and the flora and fauna that reside on the holes. In general there is a lot less than in past Opens and it is clunky to use. Not a good job at all IMO in building this year's website.
 
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And Rory starts his tournament with a tee shot OB left. With an iron no less. His THIRD shot buried in the left rough. Can a triple bogey be far behind?
 
Oh, and now The Open website has crashed. I can't get anything. Back to the drawing board by whoever created that site.
 
Rory follows that up with a bogey on #3. +5 now. This is not how he imagined his first round would go I am sure. This will be going through the motions now for the rest of the round. He is already 9 strokes off the lead in just three holes. Don't see how he is going to be able to pull it together mentally for the last 15 holes.
 
Could have been worse for Rory. Could have been David Duval who had a quad on 5 and then a 15, yes 1 15 on 7.
OMG...finally able to tune in...just about choked on my Cheerios...

oh McIlroy
the gorse, the gorse is callin'
down fairway One
your round has come undone...

And I wonder what it looked like for those of you following along at home...? :eek:

I have never seen a player certainly of his caliber crash and burn fast to take himself out of a tournament. It was stunning.

He has gotten it back to +3. Assuming he ends that way, he would have to shoot a 65 tomorrow at least. That will not happen.
 
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Bill - very true for Rory. It could go worse...I was just shocked when I checked at the progress of the round and saw that first thing.

Duval - a 15? A 15!?! stunning...just shaking my head at the magnitude of that...that's mythical, almost McAvoy like...wow...
 
Bill - very true for Rory. It could go worse...I was just shocked when I checked at the progress of the round and saw that first thing.

Duval - a 15? A 15!?! stunning...just shaking my head at the magnitude of that...that's mythical, almost McAvoy like...wow...
I made a 15 once...Damned windmill blades kept getting me! :mad:
 
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